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08.07.2002 |
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| Buddhism and George Washington | ||||||||||||
Thoughts I've thunk while sippin' at a cup of tea and reading something provoking, often get dropped here for the benefit of humanity and my own hubris.
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I picked up the September 2002 issue of Shambhala Sun (a Buddhist magazine) and read the initial editorial from the Editor, Melvin McLeod, where he says: Throughout this issue, the message is: you can't pretend. The spiritual path, if genuine, is never based on pretending you're someone you're not, dreaming about the person you might become, or projecting some fantasy on a spiritual teacher. Ok, I can buy that. However, I recently saw a documentary on George Washington. And his modus operandi was to pretend... or really to just act a particular role. For instance, he came up with a role for what a general should be, and then he just acted the part until he became a general. So why couldn't you envision the role of a person on a spritual path and then act the part until you were the part? I mean, this seems like a pretty practical way to grow into a future vision. I guess the problem would come when you wanted to grow without a vision... to grow in such a way that it reflects your internal being. So perhaps the key is really to look deeply* into your inner-being, and by looking you will also reflect, and by reflecting, you will grow... * The term, looking deeply, was borrowed by another article from this same publication by Thich Nhat Hanh. I just started reading it, so I will probably have more to say on this article later. Page Update [13 August 2002]: This morning I ran across an interesting quote that I think relates to the above. It is from Sylvia Boorstein, Pay Attention for Goodness' Sake, found in the same magazine on page 79: [The Buddha] understood the mechanism by which the mind, in confusion, weaves individual experiences into an ongoing, seemingly unbroken narrative of a life in which one finds oneself cast as the author of the drama, the principal player, and the hero and victim of everything that happens. Realizing that the sense of owning that role is illusion—and that the role itself is burdensome, frightful to play—the Buddha was able to stop. I guess if you want to be President of the United States, I guess you need to follow the example of George … Washington, that is. If you want to enjoy life, don't. Thought originally posted on Wednesday, 7 August 2002
© 2002-2005, Howard Abrams • Except where otherwise noted, all original content is licensed under a Creative Commons License (see details). |
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